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Good Weekend

The July 13 Edition

There was a vacant block near my friend Robyn’s house when I was growing up. It was our favourite place to scamper to; away from adults, full of trees to climb and redolent of my favourite book at the time, The Magic Faraway Tree. There was a derelict home nearby, too, that we called Witchy Poo’s house. I was petrified of it, and never took up the dare to breach the gate and go inside. These were outliers in an old-fashioned area full of family homes – magic to kids precisely because of their rarity. Today, judging by Greg Callaghan’s cover story, such vacant blocks and derelict houses have mushroomed across Sydney and Melbourne – this at a time of dire rental shortages and spiralling home prices. In his meticulously researched story, Callaghan asks why this is so, what can be done about it – and why there’s not more of an outcry about it from the political class. Editor, Katrina Strickland

12 stories
The July 13 Edition

Left to rot: The ‘ghost homes’ scourge in our big cities – amid a housing crisis

Tens of thousands of homes sit empty across our major cities, while luxury units replace old apartment blocks - all while debate rages about our home shortage.

  • by Greg Callaghan
Santiago de Compostela

Australians are becoming Camino converts in record numbers. Why?

More and more Australians are walking the Camino de Santiago, often as a pivotal reset in their lives – and returning transformed.

  • by Helen Pitt

I hired a male sex worker for my 70th birthday. It didn’t go as planned

Mitch, in his 30s, seemed like a perfect gift to self. But then...

  • by Gail Rice
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COMET. PENONG, 2021. I came across the impressive sight of the biggest windmill in Australia – a Comet wind pump known as Big Bruce – in Penong, on the edge of the Nullarbor Plain in the state’s far west. The Comet occupies the foreground of this photo, towering over a clutch of other windmills in an outdoor museum the locals created to preserve an important part of our farming heritage (windmills have been increasingly superseded by solar pumps). I’d heard about the museum but stumbled across it by accident, the utilitarian beauty of the blades spiking my curiosity.
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‘I had to stop’: An Adelaide photographer on his home state’s striking landscapes

From the country’s biggest windmill and one of its loneliest roads to Henley Beach in high summer: a collection of Alex Frayne’s most-loved landscapes.

  • by Alex Frayne
Two of Us
Two of Us

On an early date, Sammy introduced Rachael to his sport. Now, he’s her Olympic coach

Olympic breaker Rachael Gunn needs Samuel Free to be her husband some days, her coach others. The two aren’t always the same.

  • by Kimberly Gillan
“Everyone’s naked in a Korean spa. And they don’t give you big towels.”

A pig, an alien and a staircase: The meaning of Aaron Chen’s tattoos

The comedian and actor on how he chooses work (and his tatts), being intimidated in a Korean spa – and eating 40 cheeseburgers with a mate.

  • by Benjamin Law
Modern Guru
Modern Guru

She wants to roam the planet. He wants to stay put and save it. Which argument flies?

Let her scratch that travel itch, writes our Modern Guru.

  • by Danny Katz
The wave

The wave

They were negotiating the skinny, inner-city streets when Nev pulled over to accommodate an approaching car, blasted the horn and waved sarcastically at the oblivious, passing motorist. In the back seat, Emma and Tom exchanged a look. “No wave?” Tom said. “No f---in’ wave,” Nev confirmed. “It’s what’s wrong with the world, I reckon,” Emma said, mimicking Nev’s baritone. “If you ask me,” Tom growled, “the social contract’s breaking down.” Nev eyed them in the rear-view mirror. “Mock all you like. But you’ll see,” he said. Scowling, he drove on, scanning the streets for more slights, insults, portents of doom. Words by Paul Connolly. Illustration by Jim Pavlidis.

John Krasinski, Taika Waititi, Rami Malek and Cillian Murphy all sporting a brooch on the red carpet.

Men’s jewellery: Dare we brooch the topic?

Plus: get ready for the weekend with these fresh diversions.

  • by Deborah Cooke, Greg Callaghan, Melissa Singer, Katrina Strickland, Dani Valent and Barry Divola
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Helen Goh’s tartiflette galette.

Tartiflette galette (cheese and potato tart)

Two classic French recipes combine to create this open-faced, cheese-and-potato pie.

  • by Helen Goh
Danielle Alvarez’s double lemon cake with vanilla sugar.

Double-lemon loaf cake with sugar crust

Danielle Alvarez’s lemon cake of dreams also happens to be dairy-free.

  • by Danielle Alvarez

You might think you’re ‘helping’, but leave the plate-stacking to the professionals

When empty plates disappear without you even realising, you’re in good hands. However, we don’t always make it easy for waitstaff.

  • by Terry Durack
Good Weekend Quiz online index image

Good Weekend Quiz

Trivia buffs: test your knowledge.

Original URL: https://www.brisbanetimes.com.au/national/the-july-13-edition-20240617-p5jmba.html